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I have a couple of beautiful tomato plants blooming and setting fruit like crazy. They are on a deck that get full afternoon sun and can get very hot. With the 80+ degree weather coming up, should I be concerned about shading them?

Yeah! My tomato plants aren't quite as advanced. I have a beefsteak with 2 fruits and a cherry tomato plant. It's projected to get up to 102 for a couple of days this weekend. I'm concerned about my plants and my worms. Do we need to shade our tomato plants?

Darcyf5g - why do you think your getting so much fruit? Good job with MM?

Hi Darcy, glad to hear you are getting such great fruit set. Apparently tomatoes can get sunburned, though I personally haven't experienced it yet. I'm not worried about mine, but perhaps a more experienced tomato grower will come along with their advice.

I guess 90 o F & above is the danger zone , mine got hit with 93 o F in the glasshouse for a few hours before I shade painted the greenhouse glass , they were like strips of thin green rubber as limp as a vicars handshake .

A quick dash around spraying a fine mist on the plants , on the glass and on the floor with the spray wand on the hose pipe rescued them as the temps dropped to the mid 80's , a few hours later they were pert & rampant again .I was lucky , much longer and they'd have only been fit for the compost heap .

It is supposed to get up to 95 here this weekend as well. I believe that as long as they have been properly aclimatized to being outside, and that they are well watered they should be able to take the hot weather well. I have been thinking that that is what my plants have been waiting for. Where I live it is quite hot in the summer and the tomatoes thrive. It does seem a little foreign though after all the rain and cold weather we have had.

"Hot" is a relative word. You guys are concerned about the 80's and 90's. I'm complaining about the week of 100-109 F we are starting and then I think of Brainchasm in Las Vegas with 115 F expected. One thing I am now rabid about is mulching, mulching, mulching. I love the light-colored playground bark I found.

Plantoid, I love English humor. You crack me up. (means: make me laugh)

I think if the plants are established that with proper watering they should do just fine...however, blossoms and setting fruit are affected by high daytime and night time temps. Last year here in kansas city my tomato plants survived longs stints of temps above 100 degrees...highest was around 115 degrees...and night time temps remained above 85 degrees. The plants remained healthy but there was a major gap in tomato production.

@sanderson wrote:"Hot" is a relative word. You guys are concerned about the 80's and 90's. I'm complaining about the week of 100-109 F we are starting and then I think of Brainchasm in Las Vegas with 115 F expected. One thing I am now rabid about is mulching, mulching, mulching. I love the light-colored playground bark I found.

Plantoid, I love English humor. You crack me up. (means: make me laugh)

+1 If it is getting HOT in your neighborhood and you love your SFG, the best thing you can do for it is mulch. I too prefer the shredded bark mulch. I find it is easy to remove and no weed seeds.

@sanderson wrote:"Hot" is a relative word. You guys are concerned about the 80's and 90's. I'm complaining about the week of 100-109 F we are starting and then I think of Brainchasm in Las Vegas with 115 F expected. One thing I am now rabid about is mulching, mulching, mulching. I love the light-colored playground bark I found.

Plantoid, I love English humor. You crack me up. (means: make me laugh)

I feel that a light mulch will reflect the heat onto the plants and as a consequence can easily end up cooking them . Where as a darker brown mulch will absorb the heat and pass it into the soil without causing too much evaporation & also radiate some heat once the sun has gone to bed Perhaps someone who has used both colour tones wold like to comment with their experiences and /or observations.

Well here comes the heat, but I'm glad we're not going to be as hot as some other places I'm hearing about:affraid: . I will just keep an eye on my tomatoes, I might set up a ladder or something to drape some burlap on for shade if it gets too hot.

grownsunshine, I really don't know why they are doing so well. I bought them at a local nursery when they were about 1 foot tall and very healthy. I put them in containers that hold 3 cubic feet of soil,(1 per container) in mid may. Then I kept them covered with summer weight row cover until it started to warm up. I water consistently so they get an inch a week, unless it's raining. I also added a little organic tomato food that my nursery recommended into my soil. Then I just let them grow and they are happy. I just hope they don't mind this heat wave.

It's not just my tomatoes that are doing well. My husband and I have been able to have salad from our SFG's everyday for the last month. We've also had Chard, Broccoli, snap peas and radishes. This is the first time I've tried gardening this way and it's been so productive I can't believe it. Beginners luck?

I'm in the northeast and high temps are rare here, so when they say it'll hit 90F, I take out the shade cloth and put up barriers between the sun and my tomatoes, clipping it to bamboo poles.Most of the cloth is placed diagonally to poles to shade the largest space. That way I can also switch the cloth behind the plants to protect from the hot western sun.I can report that my tomatoes did just fine thru the heat and are still blossoming and making green fruit. This is much too early in our season to have temps that high.

I'm near Sanderson so we've been getting ready for the crazy heat too. I had put some of my shade cloth away as the young plants had grown but I've brought it out for the weekend heat wave.

I just feel nothing likes 110 degree heat and everything would prefer a little filtered sun on those days! My lemon cucumbers have been wilting every day in the afternoon - hopefully they'll be happier.

My very first tomato will be ripe today or tomorrow. It was in a four pack from a local nursery and was supposed to be a Roma but it was obviously a wrong seed. Everything else including my cherry tomatoes, have a lot of fruit growing but not yet ripening.

So this may be an appropriate place to bring up a fun fact my mom learned from the famous Las Vegas Tomato Lady. Plants respire (breathe). The temperature released when they breathe out is always the same, regardless of the temperature outside. I can't remember the exact temp the tomatoes respire at, but it was about 75 degrees F. So tomato lady says her goal when growing tomatoes in the heat of Las Vegas is to create a heap with her tomato vines, because inside the heap the temperature will always be that 75 degrees that the plants are breathing out. Interesting, huh?